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Dive into the research topics where Kehao Zhao is active.

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Featured researches published by Kehao Zhao.


Nature | 2008

The structural basis of protein acetylation by the p300/CBP transcriptional coactivator

Xin Liu; Ling Wang; Kehao Zhao; Paul R. Thompson; Yousang Hwang; Ronen Marmorstein; Philip A. Cole

The transcriptional coactivator p300/CBP (CREBBP) is a histone acetyltransferase (HAT) that regulates gene expression by acetylating histones and other transcription factors. Dysregulation of p300/CBP HAT activity contributes to various diseases including cancer. Sequence alignments, enzymology experiments and inhibitor studies on p300/CBP have led to contradictory results about its catalytic mechanism and its structural relation to the Gcn5/PCAF and MYST HATs. Here we describe a high-resolution X-ray crystal structure of a semi-synthetic heterodimeric p300 HAT domain in complex with a bi-substrate inhibitor, Lys-CoA. This structure shows that p300/CBP is a distant cousin of other structurally characterized HATs, but reveals several novel features that explain the broad substrate specificity and preference for nearby basic residues. Based on this structure and accompanying biochemical data, we propose that p300/CBP uses an unusual ‘hit-and-run’ (Theorell–Chance) catalytic mechanism that is distinct from other characterized HATs. Several disease-associated mutations can also be readily accounted for by the p300 HAT structure. These studies pave the way for new epigenetic therapies involving modulation of p300/CBP HAT activity.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2006

Structure of the human Papillomavirus E7 oncoprotein and its mechanism for inactivation of the retinoblastoma tumor suppressor.

Xin Liu; Adrienne Clements; Kehao Zhao; Ronen Marmorstein

The E7 oncoprotein from human Papillomavirus (HPV) mediates cell transformation in part by binding to the human pRb tumor suppressor protein and E2F transcription factors, resulting in the dissociation of pRb from E2F transcription factors and the premature cell progression into the S-phase of the cell cycle. This activity is mediated by the LXCXE motif and the CR3 zinc binding domain of the E7 protein. In this study we report the x-ray crystal structure of the CR3 region of HPV E7 and a structure-based mutational analysis to investigate its mode of pRb and E2F binding and E2F displacement from pRb. The structure reveals a novel zinc-bound E7-CR3 obligate homodimer that contains two surface patches of sequence conservation. Mutation of residues within these patches reveals that one patch is required for pRb binding, whereas the other is required for E2F binding. We also show that both E7-mediated interactions are required to disrupt pRb·E2F complexes. Based on these studies we present a mechanistic model for how E7 displaces E2F from pRb. Because the CR3 region of HPV E7 has no detectable homology to other human proteins, the structure-function studies presented here provide an avenue for developing small molecule compounds that inhibit HPV-E7-mediated cell transformation.


Nature Structural & Molecular Biology | 2006

Structure of a human ASF1a-HIRA complex and insights into specificity of histone chaperone complex assembly.

Yong Tang; Maxim Poustovoitov; Kehao Zhao; Megan Garfinkel; Adrian A. Canutescu; Roland L. Dunbrack; Peter D. Adams; Ronen Marmorstein

Human HIRA, ASF1a, ASF1b and CAF-1 are evolutionally conserved histone chaperones that form multiple functionally distinct chromatin-assembly complexes, with roles linked to diverse nuclear process, such as DNA replication and formation of heterochromatin in senescent cells. We report the crystal structure of an ASF1a–HIRA heterodimer and a biochemical dissection of ASF1as mutually exclusive interactions with HIRA and the p60 subunit of CAF-1. The HIRA B domain forms an antiparallel β-hairpin that binds perpendicular to the strands of the β-sandwich of ASF1a, via β-sheet, salt bridge and van der Waals contacts. The N- and C-terminal regions of ASF1a and ASF1b determine the different affinities of these two proteins for HIRA, by contacting regions outside the HIRA B domain. CAF-1 p60 also uses B domain–like motifs for binding to ASF1a, thereby competing with HIRA. Together, these studies begin to define the molecular determinants of assembly of functionally diverse macromolecular histone chaperone complexes.


Journal of Virology | 2005

Inhibition of Epstein-Barr Virus OriP Function by Tankyrase, a Telomere-Associated Poly-ADP Ribose Polymerase That Binds and Modifies EBNA1

Zhong Deng; Constandache Atanasiu; Kehao Zhao; Ronen Marmorstein; Juan I. Sbodio; Nai Wen Chi; Paul M. Lieberman

ABSTRACT Tankyrase (TNKS) is a telomere-associated poly-ADP ribose polymerase (PARP) that has been implicated along with several telomere repeat binding factors in the regulation of Epstein-Barr virus origin of plasmid replication (OriP). We now show that TNKS1 can bind to the family of repeats (FR) and dyad symmetry regions of OriP by using a chromatin immunoprecipitation assay and DNA affinity purification. TNKS1 and TNKS2 bound to EBNA1 in coimmunoprecipitation experiments with transfected cell lysates and with purified recombinant proteins in vitro. Two RXXPDG-like TNKS-interacting motifs in the EBNA1 amino-terminal domain mediated binding with the ankyrin repeat domain of TNKS. Mutations of both motifs at EBNA1 G81 and G425 abrogated TNKS binding and enhanced EBNA1-dependent replication of OriP. Small hairpin RNA targeted knock-down of TNKS1 enhanced OriP-dependent DNA replication. Overexpression of TNKS1 or TNKS2 inhibited OriP-dependent DNA replication, while a PARP-inactive form of TNKS2 (M1045V) was compromised for this inhibition. We show that EBNA1 is subject to PAR modification in vivo and to TNKS1-mediated PAR modification in vitro. These results indicate that TNKS proteins can interact directly with the EBNA1 protein, associate with the FR region of OriP in vivo, and inhibit OriP replication in a PARP-dependent manner.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2009

Structure and biochemical characterization of protein acetyltransferase from Sulfolobus solfataricus.

Michael M. Brent; Ayaka Jennifer Iwata; Juliana Carten; Kehao Zhao; Ronen Marmorstein

The Sulfolobus solfataricus protein acetyltransferase (PAT) acetylates ALBA, an abundant nonspecific DNA-binding protein, on Lys16 to reduce its DNA affinity, and the Sir2 deacetylase reverses the modification to cause transcriptional repression. This represents a “primitive” model for chromatin regulation analogous to histone modification in eukaryotes. We report the 1.84-Å crystal structure of PAT in complex with coenzyme A. The structure reveals homology to both prokaryotic GNAT acetyltransferases and eukaryotic histone acetyltransferases (HATs), with an additional “bent helix” proximal to the substrate binding site that might play an autoregulatory function. Investigation of active site mutants suggests that PAT does not use a single general base or acid residue for substrate deprotonation and product reprotonation, respectively, and that a diffusional step, such as substrate binding, may be rate-limiting. The catalytic efficiency of PAT toward ALBA is low relative to other acetyltransferases, suggesting that there may be better, unidentified substrates for PAT. The structural similarity of PAT to eukaryotic HATs combined with its conserved role in chromatin regulation suggests that PAT is evolutionarily related to the eukaryotic HATs.


Acta Crystallographica Section D-biological Crystallography | 2006

High-resolution structure of the p53 core domain: implications for binding small-molecule stabilizing compounds

William C. Ho; Cheng Luo; Kehao Zhao; Xiaomei Chai; Mary X. Fitzgerald; Ronen Marmorstein

The p53 transcriptional regulator is the most frequently mutated protein in human cancers and the majority of tumor-derived p53 mutations map to the central DNA-binding core domain, with a subset of these mutations resulting in reduced p53 stability. Here, the 1.55 A crystal structure of the mouse p53 core domain with a molecule of tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane (Tris) bound through multiple hydrogen bonds to a region of p53 shown to be important for repair of a subset of tumor-derived p53-stability mutations is reported. Consistent with the hypothesis that Tris binding stabilizes the p53 core domain, equilibrium denaturation experiments are presented that demonstrate that Tris binding increases the thermodynamic stability of the mouse p53 core domain by 3.1 kJ mol(-1) and molecular-dynamic simulations are presented revealing an overall reduction in root-mean-square deviations of the core domain of 0.7 A when Tris is bound. It is also shown that these crystals of the p53 core domain are suitable for the multiple-solvent crystal structure approach to identify other potential binding sites for possible core-domain stabilization compounds. Analysis of the residue-specific temperature factors of the high-resolution core-domain structure, coupled with a comparison with other core-domain structures, also reveals that the L1, H1-S5 and S7-S8 core-domain loops, also shown to mediate various p53 activities, harbor inherent flexibility, suggesting that these regions might be targets for other p53-stabilizing compounds. Together, these studies provide a molecular scaffold for the structure-based design of p53-stabilization compounds for development as possible therapeutic agents.


Archive | 2006

Structure of the Sir2 Family of NAD+-Dependent Histone/Protein Deacetylases

Kehao Zhao; Ronen Marmorstein

Sir2 enzymes are broadly conserved from bacteria to humans, and eukaryotic organisms typically contain multiple Sir2 enzymes that target different protein substrates to mediate diverse biological processes including gene silencing, DNA repair, genome stability, longevity, metabolism, adipogenesis, and cell physiology. These enzymes use a conserved catalytic core domain to bind NAD+ and acetyl-lysine-bearing protein targets. They generate lysine, 2′-0-acetyl-ADP-ribose, and nicotinamide products and contain more variable N- and C-terminal domains that may contribute protein-specific functions. Structural and related biochemical studies on the Sir2 enzymes from several laboratories have provided important insights into their conserved mode of NAD+ and acetyl-lysine binding, recognition, and catalysis, as well as the distinguishing features that allow different members of the family to target their respective cognate substrates. This chapter summarizes the results of the structural analysis of the Sir2 enzymes as well as the implications of these studies for structure-based design of Sir2-specific small-molecule compounds that might modulate Sir2 functions for therapeutic application.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2004

Structural basis for nicotinamide cleavage and ADP-ribose transfer by NAD(+)-dependent Sir2 histone/protein deacetylases.

Kehao Zhao; Robyn Harshaw; Xiaomei Chai; Ronen Marmorstein


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2003

Structure of a Sir2 substrate, Alba, reveals a mechanism for deacetylation-induced enhancement of DNA binding.

Kehao Zhao; Xiaomei Chai; Ronen Marmorstein


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2007

The Structurally Disordered KRAB Repression Domain Is Incorporated into a Protease Resistant Core upon Binding to KAP-1-RBCC Domain

Hongzhuang Peng; Lisa C. Gibson; Allan D. Capili; Katherine L. B. Borden; Michael J. Osborne; Sandra L. Harper; David W. Speicher; Kehao Zhao; Ronen Marmorstein; Thomas A. Rock; Frank J. Rauscher

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Ronen Marmorstein

University of Pennsylvania

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Xiaomei Chai

Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Xin Liu

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Philip A. Cole

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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Cheng Luo

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ling Wang

Johns Hopkins University

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Adrienne Clements

University of Pennsylvania

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